Tupac Shakur’s Earnest 1995 Prison Letter Selling for $225,000

A handwritten five-page letter penned by Tupac Shakur while incarcerated in 1995 is now being offered with a $225,000 asking price. Memorabilia sellers Moments in Time are selling the letter, which the late rapper wrote to former Death Row employee Nina Bhadreshwar while serving nine months behind bars at the Clinton Correctional Facility (commonly referred to as Dannemora) on sexual assault charges, Complex writes.

Tupac Shakur; Jailhouse Letter

Later, Shakur recounts being „schooled in the Rules of the Game“ in Oakland, driving through Los Angeles during the 1992 riots and his own rise to stardom. „[Many] never survive the next level of Thug Life…. They become addicted to death. A True Boss Playa knows when to advance…. U must play the game, not let the game play u,“ Tupac writes.

The letter was meant strictly for Bhadreshwar, who also ran Death Row Magazine, to use, as Tupac writes in a preface to the essay, „I am not granting this information 2 any other publication, not even Time & Rolling Stone.“

Tupac Shakur
Tupac Shakur mug shot for the New York State Department of Corrections in 1995 Michael Ochs Archives/Getty
„Hopefully this will do some of U some good. If it does, then I don’t sit in jail in vain,“ the rapper writes. „I’ll see y’all in about 18 months. If it’s still in me I’ll drop another album, not 4 me but 4 the homiez that made it #1 and platinum in two weeks.“ Shakur was freed nine months into his sentence and released All Eyez on Me four months later.

In February 2015, another handwritten Tupac letter was unveiled at a Grammy Museum tribute to the rapper, revealing that Shakur planned an all-star ONE NATION album featuring artists like Outkast, E-40, Scarface, Smif-n-Wessum and many more. A rare photo of Shakur riding a rollercoaster at Six Flags Magic Mountain was also unearthed and put on the auction block.